This motion is made in one of fifteen petitions to review two orders of the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) signed by Alexander M. Schmidt, Commissioner of Food and Drugs, on July 25, 1973, and published in the Federal Register on August 2, 1973. These orders added to 21 C.F.R. Part 80—Defi-nitions and Standards of Identity for Food for Special Dietary Uses, 38 F.R. 20730-40, and revised Part 125—Label Statements Concerning Dietary Properties of Food Purporting to Be or Represented for Special Dietary Uses, 38 F.R. 20708-18. These voluminous regulations, fully effective Dectmber 31, 1974, are the end-product of a Notice of Proposal To Revise Regulations published in 1962, 27 F.R. 5815. The final phase began with a notice of public hearing in 1968, 33 F.R. 8679; the hearings lasted for almost two years and produced over 32,000 pages of testimony and thousands of pages of exhibits. Each set of regulations is preceded by several pages of comment (hereafter the preamble) in which the exceptions are summarized and reasons are givеn for their rejection or adoption. The petitions to review, filed in this Circuit and in the Ninth and District of Columbia Circuits, have all found their way to this court under 28 U.S.C. § 2112(a) and have been consolidated.
The basis for the instant motion to take the deposition of Commissioner Schmidt and for related relief or to appoint а special master to achieve similar ends is as follows: Tentative final orders signed by Charles C. Edwards, then Commissioner of Food and Drugs, were published in January, 1973, 38 F.R. 2143-50, 2152-62; the time for filing exceptions expired on April 20, 1973. Meanwhile Commissioner Edwards had resigned. The formal exceptions spread
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over 1,000 pages; there were 20,000 additional letters. Commissioner Schmidt took office on July 12, 1973. During the 13-day period ending with the signing of the orders here under review, he signed and caused to be published 14 final regulations, 13 proposed regulations and 6 notices stretching over many pages of the Federal Register, many of which deal with the composition or label-ling of food products.
1
The final regulations here at issue contain a recital that the Commissioner had “considered the evidence received at the hearing, the hearing examiner’s report, and all the exceptions and written arguments which were filed . . .”
In an effort to dеvelop that it was physically impossible for the new Commissioner to have reviewed and considered the objections prior to signing the orders here at issue, the petitioners instituted an action against him in the District Court for the Southern District of New York. Judge Gurfein dismissed this for lack of jurisdiction. He noted that, as the pаrties agreed, under 21 U.S.C. § 371(f) jurisdiction to review the orders lay in the courts of appeals. Plaintiffs contended, however, that a court of appeals could not take additional evidence before itself both because § 371(f)(2) empowers the court of appeals, when a petitioner applies for leave to adduce additional evidence and makes a proper showing, only to “order such additional evidence . . . to be taken before the Secretary” which would be manifestly inappropriate here, and because its collegial nature makes a court of appeals institutionally ill-adapted to take evidence itself. From the premise thus thought to be established, plaintiffs reasoned that, under § 9(b) of the Administrative Procedure Act, now 5 U.S.C. § 703, “the special statutory review proceeding” was inadequate for their immediate needs and an action lay in the district court. Judgе Gurfein rejected both branches of plaintiffs’ premise largely on the authority of Braniff Airways, Inc. v. C.A.B.,
The Braniff case may not be quite so authoritative as the district judge thought, since the Federal Aviation Act, 49 U.S.C. § 1486, contains no express provision for the taking of additional evidence, although it probably *1144 would be construed to require this to be taken before the Civil Aeronautics Board if taken аt all. We nevertheless are in complete agreement with the court's rejection of petitioners’ premise. The provision in 21 U.S.C. § 371(f)(2) that additional evidence shall be taken before the Secretary refers to evidence that might alter his determination on the merits and for that reason should be taken before him—not to evidence that, because of procedural irregularity, his determination was a nullity) A reviewing court has inherent power to obtain evidence needed to enable it to decide a contention of this sort. The difficulties in a court of appeals’ informing itself with respect to such a matter are imaginary. There is nothing to prevent the hearing of evidence by three judges, as sometimes occurs in courts convoked under 28 U.S.C. §§ 2281 and 2282, cumbersome though it be. 3 Apart from the possibility of appointing a special master, an alternate form of relief sought here by petitioners, the evidence desired could doubtless be obtained by deposition, as petitioners primarily propose. We thus entertain no doubt of our power to grant petitioners’ motion.
Conceding that it is not the function of this court “to probe the mental processes” of the Commissioner, Morgan v. United States,
It is plain enough that if this motion had come before us in the period between the first
Morgan
case, Morgan v. United States,
It is hardly necessary to say that when a decision has been made by the Secretary of the Interior, courts wilh not entertain an inquiry as to the extent of his investigation and knowledge of the points decided, or as to the methods by which he reached his determination.
Subsequent Supreme Court decisions have not detracted from the force of
Morgan IV.
Petitioners rely on United States ex rel. Accardi v. Shaughnessy,
The facts of this case do not constitute nearly the showing of bad faith necessary to justify further inquiry; indeed they vividly illustrate the necessity of adhering to the presumption of regularity with respect to the participation of the officer authorized to sign administrative orders, especially in the context of the promulgation of legislative rules as distinguished from adjudication. As stated, the regulations here at issue are the end-product of more
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than a decade of work by the FDA. Petitioners do not contest that predecessors of Commissioner Schmidt, notably Commissioner Edwards, took an active part in the development of the regulations. All would have been well, apparently, if Commissioner Edwards had continued to serve. But because he resigned in April 1973 and Commissioner Schmidt did not take office until mid-July, promulgation must wait until the new Commissioner could personally familiarize himself with 1,000 pages of formal exceptions, 20,000 letters, and the staff’s views about them, and read the relevant portions of the record (or summaries of them). And the sаme must be true of all the other regulations awaiting the new Commissioner’s signature. With the enormous increase in delegation of lawmaking power which Congress has been obliged to make to agencies, both independent and in the executive branch, and in the complexity of life, government would become impossible if courts were to insist on anything of the sort. It would suffice under the circumstances that Commissioner Schmidt considered the summaries of the objections and of the answers contained in the elaborate preambles and conferred with his staff about them. There is no reason why he could not have done this even in the limited time available,
cf.
Twin City Milk Producers Ass’n v. McNutt,
The motion to take the testimony of the Commissioner and to have other discovery, or for the appointment of a master, is denied.
Notes
. Examples are Amino Acids in Food for Human Consumption, dated July 19, 1973, 38 F.R. 20036-39, and Standards of Quality for Foods for Which There Are No Standards of Identity, dated July 25, 1973, 38 F.R. 20726-30. Others deal with unrelated problems, e. g., Ch. 1, Part 273, Additional Standards for Source Plasma (Human) Used in Preparation of Blood Derivatives Intended for Injection, dated July 17, 1973, 38 F. R. 19362-68.
. The district judge stated that the only thing which gave him pause was a remark by the writer in Toilet Goods Ass’n v. Gardner,
. Indeed evidence was taken before a court of three judges in Morgan v. United States,
. Mr. Justice Roberts dissented on another issue. Chief Justice Hughes, the author of Morgan I, concurred in Mr. Justice Frankfurter’s opinion.
. The difficulties of such an inquiry are illustrated by Mr. Justice Blackmun’s concurrence,
The statement in
Overton Park
that the district court could take testimony as to reasons was extended by Camp v. Pitts,
. It should be noted that the demands on the Commissioner’s time during the 13 days preceding the signing of these orders are somewhat exaggerated by the observation, stressed by petitioners and mentioned above, that in that period he signed and caused to be published 14 final regulations, 13 proрosed regulations, and 6 notices. Although 21 U.S.C. § 371, for example, speaks in terms of action by the Secretary (and by delegation the Commissioner, 21 C.F.R. §§ 2.68-2.98) throughout the process of proposal and promulgation of many types of regulations with respect to food and drugs, nevertheless whatever remains of the
Morgan I
requirement that “The one who decides must hear” surely applies to the one who
ultimately
decides. Compare Opp Cotton Mills, Inc. v. Administrator,
. Very shortly after Morgan I, a perceptive commentator had pointed out that, despite its seeming “so eminently reasonable on its face,” the decision probably would require the Secretary of Agriculture “to devote all his time to the conduct of matters which must be considered petty from a national viewpoint.” A. H. Feller, Prospectus for the Further Study of Federal Administrative Law, 47 Yale L.J. 647, 662 (1938).
